On the Record:February 8, 2019

Words: Steve Smith

On the Record rounds up details about new and pending recordings of interest to the new-music community: contemporary classical music and jazz, electronic and electroacoustic music, and idioms for which no clever genre name has been coined, on CD, vinyl LP, cassette, digital-only formats… you name it.

This list of upcoming release dates is culled from press releases, Amazon and other online record stores, social-media posts, and similar resources. Dates cited correspond to U.S. release of physical recordings where applicable, and are subject to change. These listings are not comprehensive—nor could they be! To submit a forthcoming recording for consideration, email information to steve@nationalsawdust.org.

Michael Gregory Jackson
Photograph: michaelgregoryjackson.com

Album of the week

Ask any contemporary improvising guitarist, especially in the New York area, to name a fellow player who never got the widespread acclaim they were due, and chances are good the name Michael Gregory Jackson will come up before long. Seriously, the list of admirers Jackson has accrued over the years reads a like a who’s who of guitarists working in jazz-and-just-beyond: Pat Metheny, Bill Frisell, Vernon Reid, Marc Ribot, Elliott Sharp, and Mary Halvorson have all at one time or another copped to his influence.

If you’re still reading and haven’t skipped straight to the music, it might be that you’re among the many who’ve not heard of Jackson—a situation that likely has to do with a sharp career detour during the 1980s. The New Haven-born multi-instrumentalist first made waves – working as Michael Gregory, so as to avoid confusion with that other Michael Jackson – in New York’s loft-jazz scene of the 1970s. Working alongside such major innovators as Oliver Lake, David Murray, and Wadada Leo Smith, he quietly laid the groundwork for much of what we take for granted in the contemporary jazz-guitar vocabulary. That imposing triumvirate of bandleaders appears on Jackson’s exquisite 1977 debut LP, Clarity, Circle, Triangle, Square (better known simply as Clarity) initially self-released and then repressed decades later by ESP-Disk.

Clarity established Jackson not just as a resourceful guitarist with a fluid tone, a knack for creative pedal use, and fresh improvisational ideas, but also as an estimable composer whose range encompassed heady chamber jazz, proto-New Age solo pieces, and limpid ballads delivered in a sweet falsetto. Gifts, issued on Arista Novus in 1979, confirmed Jackson’s stature as a player, writer, and bandleader, working with trumpet lion Baikida Carroll and a formidable group of talented peers, including Marty Ehrlich and Jerome Harris.

Jackson also released the expansive, transitional Heart & Centeron Arista Novus in 1979, but then turned sharply toward the commercial-music sphere with his next release, Situation X, issued on Island in 1983. The slick funk session was produced by Chic’s Nile Rodgers, and featured that band’s Bernard Edwards and Tony Thompson on bass and drums, with Steve Winwood making a cameo appearance on keys. What resulted was catchy and proficient – how could it not be, with that lineup? – yet mainstream success eluded Jackson.

After a back-to-basics retreat to New England and acoustic balladry for much of the ’90s and ’00s, Jackson recently began playing jazz dates again, working with Lake and recording with Smith. That he named his new band Clarity Quartet, a clear throwback to his fabled debut, declared his intent to flex muscles and bend boundaries anew. That set the bar high for his three young Danish colleagues – saxophonist Simon Spang-Hanssen, bassist Niels Praestholm, and drummer Matias Wolf Andreasen. But these players, who have worked with the guitarist since 2013, clearly share his wavelength.

The press materials that accompany WHENUFINDITUWILLKNOW, the Clarity Quartet’s second album, suggest outright that the music constitutes a knowing return to Jackson’s loft-jazz roots. This feels like a stretch; Jackson and his players unquestionably share a vital chemistry that comes through in everything they play. But even in its freest moments, the music doesn’t approach the on-the-fly intensity and rawness of Jackson’s early years.

Then again, why should it? Jackson has accrued decades of experience, in life as well as in music, and there’s no reason why his compositions and performances shouldn’t reflect such change—and, in fact, that’s exactly what WHENUFINDITUWILLKNOW does best. Among the album’s nine tracks, six include parenthetical dedications to friends, colleagues, and loved ones, including some now gone.

The opener, “Theme X,” is a relaxed, melancholy tribute to the late pianist Geri Allen; “Clarity 6” follows with deep, yawning bass and skittering percussion, its knotty theme honoring the great bassist Fred Hopkins. Listening to Jackson warble, wobble, and sting throughout this freewheeling performance, you hear exactly what it was that appealed to Bill Frisell. Baikida Carroll is the dedicatee of the taut, bouncy “Spin,” while the joyously swinging “Blue Blue,” with its brief bursts of harmonica and tightly intertwined guitar and saxophone lines, memorializes Bruce Kevin Jackson, the guitarist’s late brother.

Some of the fiercest playing from Jackson and Spang-Hanssen comes in Ornette-ish off-kilter funk of “Clarity 3,” followed immediately by the airy samba strains “Ah Yay” with its breezy vocal refrains and beautifully patient climactic guitar solo. Jackson and Spang-Hanssen tangle again memorably in the pensive “Collectors of Social Dismay,” responding to one another’s gestures instantly to memorable effect.

Two more tributes close the album. The brash, darting “Souvenirs” is addressed to the playwright, author, and performance artist Jessica Hagedorn, with whom Jackson collaborated at New York’s Public Theater in 1978. And “Meditation in E,” dedicated simply to Karen, his partner, ends this album – so rich in lived experience and so infused with fresh energy – in a tone of gracious, ethereal repose.

This week in "On the Record," the enterprising experimentalists of Yarn/Wire issue the fifth volume in their essential 'Currents' series—collect all six! Plus, dozens of listings for new and upcoming releases.